Current:Home > ScamsParis angers critics with plans to restrict Olympic Games traffic but says residents shouldn’t flee -RiseUp Capital Academy
Paris angers critics with plans to restrict Olympic Games traffic but says residents shouldn’t flee
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:23:16
PARIS (AP) — Stay, enjoy the once-in-a-lifetime show.
That was the message from organizers of the Paris Olympics on Wednesday as they sought to reassure the French capital’s residents that security measures and traffic restrictions won’t make their lives nightmarish during the July 26-Aug. 11 event and the Paralympic Games that follow.
But critics, including some in the Senate, were displeased by plans to require motorists to apply online for a QR code to access traffic-restricted zones of Paris during the Games. Senators complained that lawmakers had not been consulted. Nathalie Goulet, a senator from Normandy, likened the proposal to ID papers that France’s Nazi occupiers imposed in World War II.
The Senate announced that Paris police chief Laurent Nuñez would appear before senators on Thursday and be asked to explain the security measures around the event.
Nuñez, speaking to journalists, defended the planned QR code as legal and justified. He insisted that traffic restrictions would be kept to the necessary minimum and suggested that he’d been expecting criticism.
“One can always be the little ugly duckling who sulks in the corner. We know we’ll have lots of those,” the police chief said.
The traffic restrictions and other security measures detailed Wednesday by Nuñez in a newspaper interview and a subsequent news conference will be concentrated on Olympic competition routes and venues, some of them installed in the heart of Paris, and won’t be generalized across the capital.
Pedestrians and cyclists won’t need the QR code to get around, but motor vehicles and motorbikes will need it to get past some police checkpoints. Some Metro stations will be closed. But Nuñez said the general aim is to create as little economic impact as possible and for shops, restaurants and museums to remain accessible.
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said the security shouldn’t cause Parisians to flee and described the city’s first Olympic Games in a century as a gift for its residents.
“Should people leave Paris? Well no,” she said.
“At a time when the whole world is a bit depressed, with wars and conflicts, we will be the place that hosts the first big fraternal event, thanks to sport, after the COVID (pandemic),” she said.
“We are giving ourselves a collective present.”
___
AP coverage of the Paris Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games
veryGood! (685)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Alabama now top seed, Kansas State rejoins College Football Playoff bracket projection
- 'The civil rights issue of our generation'? A battle over housing erupts in Massachusetts
- California governor signs bill making insurance companies pay for IVF treatment
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Sephora Hair Sale: Save Up to 50% on Top Products Like Vegamour Hair Gro Serum & Living Proof Dry Shampoo
- MLB wild card predictions: Who will move on? Expert picks, schedule for opening round
- NFL Week 4 overreactions: Rashee Rice injury ends Chiefs’ three-peat hopes?
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Attorney says 120 accusers allege sexual misconduct against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Honda's history through the decades: Here's the 13 coolest models of all time
- MLB playoffs are a 'different monster' but aces still reign in October
- Pete Rose, MLB's all-time hits leader who earned lifetime ban, dead at 83
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Haunted by migrant deaths, Border Patrol agents face mental health toll
- John Amos, Star of Good Times and Roots, Dead at 84
- Fran Drescher Reveals How Self-Care—and Elephants!—Are Helping Her Grieve Her Late Father
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
NFL Week 4 overreactions: Rashee Rice injury ends Chiefs’ three-peat hopes?
Why was Pete Rose banned for life from MLB? Gambling on games was his downfall
Powerball winning numbers for September 30: Jackpot rises to $258 million
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Streets of mud: Helene dashes small town's hopes in North Carolina
Liberty, Aces are at the top of the WNBA. Which teams could unseat them?
Will anyone hit 74 homers? Even Aaron Judge thinks MLB season record is ‘a little untouchable’